Men demonstrated an acetylcholine-minimal lumen diameter dose-response relationship with doses up to 200 μg, while women had minimal change in MLD with doses above 50 µg.
Observational (n=277)
Does the dose-response relationship between intracoronary acetylcholine and minimal lumen diameter differ by sex in patients with angina and no obstructive coronary artery disease?
Men and women have different dose-response relationships to intracoronary acetylcholine during endothelial function testing, suggesting dosing regimens should be sex-adjusted to improve diagnostic utility.
p-value: p=<0.001
BACKGROUND: Intracoronary acetylcholine (Ach) provocation testing is the gold standard for assessing coronary endothelial function. However, dosing regimens of Ach are quite varied in the literature, and there are limited data evaluating the optimal dose. We evaluated the dose-response relationship between Ach and minimal lumen diameter (MLD) by sex and studied whether incremental intracoronary Ach doses given during endothelial function testing improve its diagnostic utility. METHODS: We evaluated 65 men and 212 women with angina and no obstructive coronary artery disease who underwent endothelial function testing using the highest tolerable dose of intracoronary Ach, up to 200 μg. Epicardial endothelial dysfunction was defined as a decrease in MLD >20% after intracoronary Ach by quantitative coronary angiography. We used a linear mixed effects model to evaluate the dose-response relationship. Deming regression analysis was done to compare the %MLD constriction after incremental doses of intracoronary Ach. RESULTS: <0.001). The %MLD constriction at 20 μg versus 50 μg and 50 μg versus 100 μg were not equivalent while the %MLD constriction at 100 μg versus 200 μg were equivalent. CONCLUSIONS: Women and men appear to have different responses to Ach during endothelial function testing. In addition to having a greater response to intracoronary Ach at all doses, men also demonstrate an Ach-MLD dose-response relationship with doses up to 200 μg, while women have minimal change in MLD with doses above 50 µg. An incremental dosing regimen during endothelial function testing appears to improve the diagnostic utility of the test and should be adjusted based on the sex of the patient.
Pargaonkar et al. (Wed,) conducted a observational in Angina and no obstructive coronary artery disease (n=277). Intracoronary acetylcholine (Ach) vs. Sex differences (men vs women) and incremental doses was evaluated on Percentage minimal lumen diameter (%MLD) constriction (p=<0.001). Men demonstrated an acetylcholine-minimal lumen diameter dose-response relationship with doses up to 200 μg, while women had minimal change in MLD with doses above 50 µg.